Part 1: Wake Up, Catholics
Part 2: Cookie Cutter Common Core & Private Education
Part 3: The People's Church
Part 4: The Theology of Community Organizing
Part 5: MODERNISM AND NOUVELLE THEOLOGY
By Betsy Kraus, 3D Research Group
"Of
all the conceivable forms of enlightenment the worst is what the people call
the Inner Light. Of all horrible
religions the most horrible is the worship of the god within…That Jones shall
worship the god within him turns out ultimately to mean that Jones shall
worship Jones. Let Jones worship the sun
or moon…cats or crocodiles, if he can find any in his street, but not the god
within."
~ G. K. Chesterton
~ G. K. Chesterton
“Come, Let
us write a new theology”
|
By the 1940s, a new Neo-Modernist Theology was becoming
established, especially in France. “Not only Marxism, but Freudianism,
Existentialism, Liberalism, Relativism and Subjectivism, Phenomenology, Structuralism,
insinuated themselves everywhere, infiltrating even in the seminars. Worse than
all these philosophies was the expansion of modernist errors spread by the so
called New Theology that
was already censored – but not crushed – by Pius XII in the encyclical Humani Generis.” (1)
New
Theology was to be in constant transformation, patterned after all other things
of the world. Therefore this theology had to be in a constant state of flux and
movement with no end. With “flux” came “on becoming” which excludes any
possibility of lasting truth. Theology was to be the life of the members of the
Church, rather than conclusions drawn from revealed data with the aid of
reason. Revealed truths should not necessarily be permanent and they should
change with time and circumstances. [Greenstock]
The
Nouvelle Theologians consisted of a group of European clergy, mostly Jesuits
and some Dominicans, head-quartered mainly in France and Germany, in the early
and mid-20th Century. As per the tenets of Modernism, the neo- modernists
included goals of reforming Scholasticism, the bedrock of the Church, which
existed from the time of Aquinas up to the Renaissance. It was attacked during
that period, and then restored by the Counter-Reformation and the Council of
Trent. The new theologians did not care for the reemergence of Scholasticism and
opted instead, for pseudo-Scholasticism. Their plans included a pursuit of
“Ressourcement”, meaning a return to the “sources” of the faith: Scripture and
writings of the Greek Church Fathers. They focused on ancient Christians and
their “diversity”. They favored the Greek Church Fathers, and some medieval
theologians. They seemed to bypass Church Synods and Councils, where truth has
always been sifted from heresy, and where Dogma and Doctrine have been defined
and defended. “By immersing themselves in the forms and categories of ancient
Christianity in all their diversity and concrete specificity, these theologians
hoped to discover and imbibe that Spirit, which was their common inspiration
and source. Hans Urs von Balthasar, referring to the Greek Fathers, said: ‘We
would rather hope to penetrate to the vital
source of their spirit, to the fundamental and secret intuition which directs the entire expression of their
thought.’” (Emphasis, Ed.) (2) Many of
the French theologians thought that the “Hegelian philosophical experience” was
best in moving man to “spiritual heights”. Urs von Balthasar employed the dialectic
in his Trinitarian doctrines.
These
theologians were seeking the “vital sap” of the ancient Christians. What was that vital sap? Perhaps they were
speaking of their concept of the pantheistic or panentheistic “Vital Immanence”
of God in the world, or pursuing a direct knowledge of the Holy Spirit, through
ancient mysticism.
Ultrasupernatualism |
No
doubt the Nouvelle theologians were aware of a “vital sap” of the early
Christian “Enthusiasts”. The Enthusiasts of “Ultrsupernaturalism” were at work
even then creating a new approach to religion. These Enthusiasts, led by
Montanus, placed the emphasis on mystical and direct personal access to God. By
the second century. Montanus established his brand of ecstasies and “speaking
in tongues”. This pursuit of Enthusiasm has continued throughout history, presently
manifested in the Holiness, Pentecostal, and Charismatic Movements. Such
movements, along with beliefs in “the Age of the Spirit”, gave rise to such
movements as Joel’s Army, Latter Day Rain, Holy Laughter, and the Dominionists.
The Roman Catholic Church, along with St. Augustine’s teachings, holds that the
miracles and extraordinary manifestations of the Holy Spirit ended with the
apostolic age, with the exception of miracles in the lives of later saints. The Charismatic movement in the
Catholic Church was a direct outgrowth of the Protestant Pentecostal movement. Catholics
who had received the full gifts of the Holy Spirit in Baptism and Confirmation,
were now accepting a protestant, Pentecostal “Baptism in the Holy Spirit”. Just
as with Charismatics today, the ancient enthusiasts expected “special graces
from God”, more so for themselves than for others, which would result in signs
and wonders. Today, Ultrasupernaturalism expects a latter day, or end-time
outpouring of grace by the Holy Spirit. However, the end-times began with the
New Covenant, and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit occurred at Pentecost. There
can be no further outpouring of the Spirit, as per the teachings of the
Catholic Church.
Socrates on “Affairs of the Heart”
|
For
the Nouvelle theologians, what had been a matter of outward forms and
ordinances, became an affair of the heart. “Sacraments were not necessarily
dispensed with; but the emphasis lies on a direct personal access to the Author
of our salvation with little intellectual background or of liturgical
expression…An inward experience of peace and joy is both the assurance which
the soul craves for and its characteristic prayer-attitude. But the
implications of enthusiasm go deeper than this; at the root of it lies a
different theology of grace. The Catholic Church’s traditional doctrine is that
grace perfects nature…but leaves it nature still. The assumption of the
enthusiast is... grace has destroyed nature, and replaced it. The saved man has
come out into a new order of being”. (3)
This is what lies at the heart of New Theology – there is no separation
between nature and grace. Human reason as a guide to any sort of
religious truth can be spurned, and man saved becomes fully man or fully human,
and therefore divine through upward and inward or” inner experience”.
Returning
to the Church in Corinth, it split its loyalties between the Apostle Paul, and other
factions. One faction, with the rallying cry “I am for Christ”, drove a wedge
between the Christianity of Christ and
The Christianity of the Church. This meant that even then there was a move
away from the ecclesiastical authority of the Church, and to the validation of
private revelation. Therefore, it would be a mistake to view the early Church
through rose-colored glasses. During this period, doctrinal “diversity” and
heresy flourished. “Yet these priest-teachers
are not yet called Fathers, and the greatest among them, Tertullian, Clement,
Origen, Hoppolytus, Novatian, Lucian, happened to be tinged with heresy; two
became antipopes; one is the father of
Arianism, another was condemned by a general council”. (4)
Both Tertullian (160-225) and Origen (185-254)
slipped into heresy. as did Gregory of Nyssa (335-395). Origen’s doctrines of
the Holy Trinity were based upon Middle Platonic triadic emanation schemes: the
pre-existence of souls, transmigration of souls, and the eventual restoration
of all souls to a state of dynamic perfection, in proximity to the godhead. Did
it matter to the neo-modernists that some of these early Fathers, models of
Ressourcement, were in heresy? Perhaps not, as elements of these concepts appear
to have seeped into the New Theology. [Fedili]
Though
brilliant, Gregory of Nyssa was influenced by Neoplatonism and Plotinus, and he
believed in the heresy of universal salvation following Origen. Plotinus was
one of the philosophers of Neoplatonism at the pagan Platonic Academy in Athens,
which was closed by Justinian in A.D. 529. Neoplatonism will be discussed in a
later issue. Another favorite of the new
theologians appeared to be Nicholas of Cusa, a Renaissance thinker who was part
of the Platonic Academy of Florence, and whose leaders delved in the Kabbala, magic,
and the occult.
Some of the Nouvelle theologians also subscribed
to the doctrine of Kenosis, proclaimed wicked by Pius XII. Kenosis is a sort of
self-emptying existent in Buddhist and Christian spirituality. Apparently it
has being currently disseminated in teachings of some in the Church. Pius XII
addressed this heresy in his Encyclical Semipternus
Rex Christus, concerning the natures of Jesus Christ: “29. There is another enemy
of the faith of Chalcedon, widely diffused outside the fold of the Catholic
religion. This is an opinion for which a rashly and falsely understood sentence
of St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians (ii, 7), supplies a basis and a shape.
This is called the kenotic doctrine, and according to it, they imagine that the
divinity was taken away from the Word in Christ. It is a wicked invention,
equally to be condemned with the Docetism opposed to it. It reduces the whole
mystery of the Incarnation and Redemption to empty the bloodless imaginations.
'With the entire and perfect nature of man'--thus grandly St. Leo the
Great--'He Who was true God was born, complete in his own nature, complete in
ours' (Ep. xxviii, 3. PL. Liv, 763. Cf. Serm. xxiii, 2. PL. lvi, 201). 30. While there is no
reason why the humanity of Christ should not be studied more deeply also from a
psychological point of view, there are, nevertheless, some who, in their
arduous pursuit, desert the ancient teachings more than is right, and make an
erroneous use of the authority of the definition of Chalcedon to support their
new ideas.” (5)
As
these Modernist and Nouvelle concepts continued to root and grow in Europe,
despite efforts on the part of the Church to crush them, it was then that Pope
John XXIII called for an Ecumenical Council.
VATICAN II
|
By
1950 the Vatican had gagged the Modernism of French Nouvelle Theologie, however it continued to expand
elsewhere. Portions of the work of most of the major Nouvelle theologians, were
proscribed by their Superiors and the Magisterium, and probably none of them or
their predecessors, escaped the sweeping condemnations of their thinking by
Pius XII in his encyclical Humani
Generis. Nevertheless, a number of these theologians were invited to be “periti”
(advisors) to Vatican II.
Vatican
II, “Unlike previous councils… did not issue any new dogmas, declare any
anathemas, or settle any grave heresies prevailing at the time. Instead, the
council became known for its renewal of Catholic Doctrine in a modern timeline
and perspective.” (6) The key words are “renewal”
and “modern timeline and perspective.” Did such words give an opening for
the neo-modernists to inject concepts of evolution, vital immanence, Kenosis,
and their concept of no separation between nature and grace into Vatican
documents?
Some participants came to the council with
demands of “Academic Freedom”, but technically no Dogma or Doctrine was changed,
as it was a “Pastoral” Council only.
What then did happen? Fr. Ralph
M. Wiltgen’s book, The Rhine flows into
the Tiber, A History of Vatican II, gives a detailed chronology of what
took place. Ann Muggeridge reported that, “At the early stage of the Council, few of
the Council fathers were sufficiently aware of the facts to be able to take
seriously Cardinal Ottaviani's warning that a revolution was being unleashed.
‘By the end of the Council, their innocence lost,’ the bishops could at least
have insisted on safeguards, but they did not … The truly revolutionary
proposals were rejected by the Council, but innovators on the drafting
commissions had couched passages in deliberately ambiguous language, in
order to win wide Conciliar support, and the disaffected intellectuals used
these ambiguous expressions to promote
the revolution after the decrees had
been passed.” [Emphasis, Ed.] (7)
“With
the war cry ‘Liberty in danger,’ they will whip up public opinion outside the
Church in their favor, and eventually extort from frightened and more or less
reluctant ecclesiastical authority the de facto permission they now possess to
attack and undermine Catholic belief from within the Church while still
officially acting as the Church’s representatives, thus creating the impression that almost
every article of Faith (God’s existence not excluded) is under consideration
and may one day be junked”. (8)
Jean Guitton, a highly acclaimed French
philosopher and who was appointed by Pope John XXIII to participate in the
Council, made the following incredible comment regarding Vatican II: “When I
read the documents relative to the Modernism as defined by Pius X, and when I
compare them to the documents of II Vatican Council…what was condemned as
heresy in 1906 was proclaimed as what is and should be from now on the doctrine
and the method of the Church…the modernists of 1906 were, somewhat, precursors
to me. My masters were part of them. My parents taught me Modernism.” (9)
Surely Guitton was a Modernist. as one of his
masters was French philosopher Henri Bergson. Bergson under the influence of
William James, Harvard philosopher, renounced both the intellectualist method
and logic. Bergson’s disciples included
the neo-Catholic or modernistic movements in France and the socialistic system
of syndicalism. Bergson, who was Chair
of Modern Philosophy at the College de France, retained his position, but his
work was turned over to Edouard LeRoy, whose work was placed on the Index. Three
of Bergson’s books were also placed on the Index of forbidden books by the
Catholic Church. They were proscribed for teaching pantheism, which conceived
God as immanent to his Creation and being himself created in the process of
Creations.
Jürgen Mettepenningen, who seems to favor the
Nouvelle Theologians’ thought, is a research fellow at the Catholic University
of Leuven, Belgium. With regards to these theologians’ work, he says: “In spite
of their rejection by their superiors and the magisterium, the core of their
aspirations was to be assimilated during Vatican II at which the sources of the
faith served as the primary basis for Catholic theology and Neo-Scholasticism
was dethroned” (10).
Father
Schillebeeckx, who was one of the most influential modernist experts at Vatican
II, wrote: “Vatican II was a kind of confirmation of what the theologians had
done before the Council: Rahner, Chenu, Congar, and others…the theologians that
had been condemned, kept away of their teaching cathedras, sent into
the exile…their theology was the one that triumphed at Vatican II.” (11)
And
what were the after-effects of this “revolution”? How accurate is the following
assessment of German Redemptorist, Bernard Haring’s view of the “new mission”
of the Church? (Keep in mind that Haring was one of those along with Charles
Curran and Richard McBride etc. who protested Humane Vitae.) “This new
theology is essentially an about face; away
from God and toward the world. This
is made clear in Father Bernard Haring’s book Toward a Christian Moral Theology. The first Chapter ‘The Impact of
Vatican II’ tells the story…It’s primary concern is not to save your
soul, your individual soul, but to acknowledge the loving presence of Christ in
the world, the loving presence of the Church and all the faithful of the human
family among the People of God. It will
open the Church to the values of the modern world….This constitution will treat
the total vocation of man, including the value of earthy goods and the earthly
task involved in this total vocation, thereby giving a positive answer to the
desires of the Communists and Marxists.
Karl Marx, Engels, and so many other of the early generations of
Communists always had the impression that pious Christians because of the piety
neglect social justice and the zeal for a better, more fraternal world. This impression was given by so many
Christians, egotists, worried only about saving their own souls through certain
religious practices and by observing the thousand and one positive laws…” (Emphasis,
Ed.) (12)
According
to Fedeli, Vatican II changed the concept of Revelation from a doctrinal,
intellectualistic concept to an historical-salvific concept, and the result is
a personalistic perspective of Revelation.
Here is what Pope John XXIII said regarding
the convening of Vatican II, “The salient point of this council is not,
therefore, a discussion of one article or another of fundamental doctrine of
the Church which has repeatedly been taught by the Fathers and by ancient and
modern theologians, and which is presumed to be well known and familiar to
all. For this a council was not
necessary. But from the renewed, serene
and tranquil adherence to all the teaching of the Church in its entirety and
preciseness, as it still shines forth in the acts of the Council of Trent and
First Vatican Council, the Christian, Catholic and apostolic spirit of the
whole word expects a step forward towards a doctrinal penetration and a
formation of consciences in faithful and
perfect conformity to the authentic doctrine which, however, should be
studied and expounded through the methods of research and through the literary
forms of modern thought. The substance
of the ancient doctrine of the Deposit of Faith is one thing, and the way it is
presented is another. And it is the
latter that must be taken into great consideration with patience if necessary,
everything being measured in the forms and proportions of a magisterium which
is predominantly pastoral in character. (Emphasis mine).” (13)
Pope
Paul VI also noted that the Council was pastoral only. “There are those who ask
what authority, what theological qualifications, the Council intended to give
to its teachings, knowing that it avoided issuing solemn dogmatic definitions
backed by the Church’s infallible teaching authority. The answer is known by those who remember the
conciliar declaration of March 6, 1964, repeated on November 16, 1964. In view
of the pastoral nature of the Council, it avoided proclaiming in an
extraordinary manner any dogmas carrying the mark of infallibility. (Emphasis
mine)” (14)
Cardinal Ratzinger, a periti at Vatican II, also stated that the Council
was not dogmatic, and only pastoral: “The Second Vatican
Council has not been treated as a part of the entire living Tradition of the Church, but as an end of Tradition, a
new start from zero. The truth is that this particular Council defined no dogma
at all, and deliberately chose to remain
on a modest level, as a merely pastoral council; and yet many treat it as though it had made itself into a sort of super dogma
which takes away the importance of all the rest.” (15)
In addition,
Cardinal Ratzinger lamented the results of Vatican II in the following
statement which appeared in L’Ossevatore
Romano in December of 1984: “Certainly
the results of Vatican II seem cruelly opposed to the expectations of everyone,
beginning with those of Pope John XXIII and then of Pope Paul VI: expected was
a new Catholic unity and instead we have been exposed to dissension which, to use the words of Pope Paul VI, seems to have
gone from self-criticism to self-destruction. Expected was a new enthusiasm,
and many wound up discouraged and bored. Expected was a great step forward,
instead we find ourselves faced with a progressive process of decadence which
has developed for the most part under the sign of a calling back to the
Council, and has therefore contributed to discrediting it for many. The net
result therefore seems negative. I am repeating here what I said ten years
after the conclusion of the work: it is incontrovertible that this period has definitely been
unfavorable for the Catholic Church.” (Emphasis added) (16)
What was the meaning of Paul VI’s statement in
his closing speech at Vatican II:
"The Church of the Council [Vatican II] (...) was also much attached with
man as he really is today, with living man, with man totally taken up with
himself, with man who not only
makes himself the centre of his own interests, but who dares to claim that he
is the principle and final cause of all reality... Secular, profane, humanism
finally revealed itself in all its terrible stature and, in a certain sense,
challenged the Council. The religion of God made man has come up against the
religion -- for there is such a one -- of man who makes himself God.” (17)
And lastly there is
this grave message in 1972 by Pope Paul VI: “‘from some fissure the
smoke of Satan has entered the temple of God.’ There is doubt, incertitude,
problematic, disquiet, dissatisfaction, confrontation. There is no longer trust
of the Church; they trust the first
profane prophet who speaks in some journal or some social movement, and they
run after him and ask him if he has the formula of true life…The Holy Father
observes, ‘We believe in
something that is preternatural that has come into the world precisely to
disturb, to suffocate the fruits of the Ecumenical Council, and to impede the
Church from breaking into the hymn of joy at having renewed in fullness its
awareness of itself…’ ” (18)
Smoke of Satan?
|
What
are Catholics to think after reading such comments? Surely Vatican II was indeed pastoral only
and, since there were only reiterations of past dogma and doctrine which are de fide, the rest of the documents
were not infallible. Vatican II is magisterially binding, however, can any
parts not in keeping with past de fide documents, councils, and teachings of
the Church, be binding?
For
an in-depth understanding of effects of Nouvelle Theology on Vatican II and the
Church, see Professor Orlando Fedeli’s report. (Footnote 1.) Professor Fedeli was from Sao Paulo, Brazil and during
his lifetime he headed up the Montfort Cultural Association. He was a member,
and an ardent defender of the Roman Catholic Church. He was not affiliated with
the Pius X movement, which simply means that one does not need to distance
themselves from the Church in order to address these issues.
In June of 2013, a video was presented by Church Militant, whereby Roman Catholic
Bishop Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Astana, Kazakhstan, and
Titular Bishop of Celerina, Switzerland, requested, in a most gracious manner,
an official magisterial clarification of Vatican II regarding the ambiguity
of the documents. The video of Bishop Schneider addressing this issue
as well as a comprehensive treatise on this subject can be viewed at: http://catholicismhastheanswer.com/vatican-ii-must-be-clarified/
Philip
Trower’s observations on Modernism, regarding the period preceding the Council,
led him to say: “An understanding of them [two
evils, Ed.] will possibly help to make clearer why an apostasy is taking
place simultaneously with an attempted movement of reform. These two evils…were
a tremendous decline in the spiritual vitality among the faithful of all ranks,
clerical and lay…masked by a grand-looking/arcade of religious practice…and the
spread of heresy, or of ideas tending toward heresy among a much higher clergy
that anyone had realized. By higher
clergy I do not mean cardinals and bishops, but theologians, scholars, thinkers
at Catholic universities and institutes of higher studies; the Catholic
intelligentsia, in fact, at its top level.” (Emphasis, Ed.) (19)
Did Nouvelle Theology, the inheritor of
Modernism, along with its errors, enter Roman Catholic thought at Vatican II to
suffocate her with the ambiguity of
“words”? Has the beautiful faith that so many hold dear been contorted by
Post Vatican II thinkers? Although there have been attempts to reign in the
more radical aspects of Nouvelle Theology, how great are the inroads to turn the Church
into a strategically planned, utilitarian, temporal organization to manage
worldly affairs of mankind, and to guard the material concerns of only the poor
and oppressed per Liberation Theology? Is the Church’s mission to now become
“The People’s Church”, to function as a funded arm of government for social
justice? Has worship and liturgy been so
altered that personal salvation through the sacraments need not be emphasized?
Through Pan-Christianism, i.e. one Christian Church only, are all inhabitants,
Christians, anonymous Christians (non-Christians, and atheists) of the world to
be ecumenically united, where no one
Christian Church would dominate? Is this the scenario Karl Rahner had in mind with his concept of the “anonymous Christian”?
Modernist thinker, Maurice Blondel, subscribed to Pan-Christianism as one of
the most esoteric of his personal thought. Would Christian unity thus have to
be accomplished esoterically through personal
inner mystical experience, personal revelation, contemplation, reflection and
action? Would this finally culminate in a spiritual evolution of mankind to
Teilhard de Chardin’s “Omega Point” where man on earth is deified? Would the
Church then “wither away” in an Age of the Spirit?
Next:
The Renaissance, “Inner Experience”, and Nouvelle Theology
Footnotes:
1.
Fedeli, Orlando, Jean Guitton and the Modernism of the II Vatican Council.
http://www.catholicapologetics.info/modernproblems/modernism/jeamodernism.htm
2.
D’Ambrosio, Marcellino, “Resourcement Theology, Aggiornamento, and the
Hermeneutics of Tradition”, Communio, Edition 18, Winter 1991. https://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/54/Ressourcement_Theology__Aggiornamento_and_the_Hermeneutics_of_Tradition.html
3. Knox, Ronald A., Enthusiasm, Oxford
University Press, New York and Oxford, 1950, page 2-3.
4. “Fathers of the Church”, New Advent,
Catholic Encyclopedia. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06001a.htm
5.
Pius XII, Sempiternus Rex
Christus, Encyclical on the Council of Chalcedon, September 8, 1951. http://www.newadvent.org/library/docs_pi12sr.htm
6.
“Second Vatican Council, Wikipedia a free encyclopedia, Modified 12/4/2014. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Vatican_Council
7 McCarthy, John F, (Reviewer),” Reappraising
the Liturgical Reform, Ann Roche Muggeride: The Desolate City: Revolution in
the Catholic Church”, Living Tradition, Organ of the Roman Theological
Forum, No. 27, 1990. http://www.rtforum.org/lt/lt27.html
8.
Trower, Philip, “The Church Learned and The Revolt of the Scholars”, Catholic
Culture, Chapter 5, page 9. http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=3745
9.
Fedeli, Orlando, Jean Guitton and the Modernism of the II Vatican Council.
http://www.catholicapologetics.info/modernproblems/modernism/jeamodernism.htm
10..
Mettepenningen, Jürgen, Nouvelle Theologie – New Theology Inheritor of
Modernism, Precursor of Vatican II, T & T Clark International, New
York, NY, 2010
11.
Fedeli, Orlando, Jean Guitton
and the Modernism of II Vatican Council. Page 36. http://www.montfort.org.br/eng/papers/brescia.html
12.
Miller, Ronald, “Evolutionism and Father Teilhard de Chardin – Part II”, Distant
Drums, Vol. VII, No.4, Page 8, December 1985
13.
Miller, Peter, “Differing from Other Councils”, The Seattle Catholic, 1/3/2003.
http://www.seattlecatholic.com/article_20030103_Differing_from_Other_Councils.html
14.
Ibid
15.
Ratzinger, Cardinal Joseph, “Cardinal Ratzinger’s address to the Bishops of
Chili”, Una Voce America, July 13, 1988. http://unavoce.org/resources/cardinal-ratzingers-address-to-bishops-of-chile/
16.
“Vatican II Must be Clarified”, Catholicism Has the Answer. http://catholicismhastheanswer.com/vatican-ii-must-be-clarified/
17.
Fedeli, Orlando, Jean Guitton and the Modernism of the II Vatican Council.
http://www.catholicapologetics.info/modernproblems/modernism/jeamodernism.htm
18,
McDonald, Fr. Alan J., “The Smoke of Satan in the Temple of the Church: Is the
Devil Real?”, Southern Orders, 3/11/2010, http://southernorderspage.blogspot.com/2010/03/smoke-of-satan-in-temple-of-church-is.html
19.
Trower, Philip, “The First Modernism, Chapter I”, The Church Learned and The
Revolt of the Scholars, Catholic Culture, http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=3745
SOURCES
1.
Greenstock, David L, T.O.P. “Thomism and the New Theology”, Thomist a
Speculative Quarterly Review. 1950. http://www.u.arizona.edu/~aversa/modernism/Thomism%20and%20the%20New%20Theology%20%28Greenstock%29.pdf
2.
Trower, Philip, The Church Learned and The Revolt of the Scholars, Catholic
Culture, http://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=3745
3.
McCarthy, John F. “Is Modernism Still Active in the Catholic Church? (Part 1)”,
Living Tradition Organ of the Roman Theological Forum, March 2004. http://www.rtforum.org/lt/lt110.html
4. Fedeli, Orlando, Jean Guitton and the Modernism of II Vatican
Council. http://www.montfort.org.br/eng/papers/brescia.html
5. Moore, Edward, “Origen of Alexandra (185-254 C.E.)” Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. http://www.iep.utm.edu/origen-of-alexandria/
6. Knox, Ronald A., Enthusiasm A Chapter in the History of
Religion. Oxford University Press. New York
and Oxford, 1950. Book can be purchased at:
http://www.amazon.com/Enthusiasm-A-Chapter-History-Religion/dp/0268009325
7. Kurtz, Lester R., The Politics of Heresy: The Modernist
Crisis in Roman Catholicism, University of California Press, 1986. https://books.google.com/books?id=wfemPgGWH1sC&source=gbs_navlinks_s
8. Naughton, E.R., “Panentheism”, New Catholic Encyclopedia,
2003. http://www.encyclopedia.com/article-1G2-3407708439/panentheism.html
9. “Jean Guitton – Biography”, The European Graduate School. http://www.egs.edu/library/jean-guitton/biography/
10. “Henri Bergson,
Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia, Modified
November 30, 2014. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Bergson